Home Community Community News Local Scouts help ready Calverton National for Memorial Day observance

Local Scouts help ready Calverton National for Memorial Day observance

Booby Doering, 11, a Weeblo Scout in Southold's Pack 6, places a flag on a grave in Section 12 of Calverton National Cemetery last year. File photo: Denise Civiletti

Thousands of volunteers decorated more than 230,000 graves at Calverton National Cemetery with small U.S. flags in the 22nd annual flag placement day conducted by Suffolk County scout troops.

Scout troops and packs from all over Suffolk, along with parents and family members, began placing flags at 9:30 this morning and had all graves decorated within about an hour.

Among them was Cub Scout Pack 6 of Southold. Under the guidance of Cubmaster Derek Bossen, the Scouts carefully placed flags at each bronze grave marker in a long row in Section 12. Though the Cub Scouts are young — they are in first through fifth grades — the solemnity of the occasion is not lost on them.

“It’s important to do this as a way to honor people who served our country,” said Bobby Doering, 11, a Weeblo who is moving up to Boy Scouts next month.

More than 3,000 people who served in World War I are buried at Calverton National.

2016_0528_calverton_gabreski_grave - 1Tens of thousands more who served in World War II are also buried there, including Francis S. Gabreski, for whom the Air National Guard base in Westhampton is named.

Gabreski enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps in July 1940 and flew with the Royal Air Force 315th Squadron of Polish pilots and, once the United States declared war, the U.S. 61st Fighter Squadron.

Gabreski’s tactical skills and courage earned him the title, “America’s Greatest Living Ace,” according to the National Cemetery Association. In 1944, awaiting leave, he volunteered for one more mission, crashed and was captured and held prisoner until March 1945. He briefly left the service in 1946, but reenlisted in the U.S. Air Force in 1947 and served in Korea. Highly decorated and respected, he retired in 1967.

Gabreski died January 31, 2002 and is buried in section 14 (grave 724).

The grave of Medal of Honor recipient Michael P. Murphy of Patchogue, who was killed in action in Afghanistan on June 28, 2005.
The grave of Medal of Honor recipient Michael P. Murphy of Patchogue, who was killed in action in Afghanistan on June 28, 2005.

There is only one Medal of Honor recipient buried at Calverton National, Lt. Michael P. Murphy, a U.S. Navy SEAL who was killed in Afghanistan on June 28, 2005. Murphy, 29, a Suffolk County native who grew up in Patchogue, was killed during Operation Red Wings, a counter-insurgent mission in Kunar province, Afghanistan. He is interred in Section 67 (Grave 3710).

The Medal of Honor is the USA’s highest military honor, awarded for personal acts of valor above and beyond the call of duty. Since 2001, 17 Americans have been awarded the Medal of Honor, six of them, including Murphy, posthumously.

Calverton National, which opened in 1978, is the nation’s busiest national cemetery, conducting about 6,000 burials each year.

 

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Denise Civiletti
Denise is a veteran local reporter and editor, an attorney and former Riverhead Town councilwoman. Her work has been recognized with numerous awards, including a “writer of the year” award from the N.Y. Press Association in 2015. She is a founder, owner and co-publisher of this website.